Cannabis demand high in Nevada, creating supply shortage

Following an overwhelming demand for recreational marijuana, Nevada regulators are set to vote Thursday on emergency rules that would expedite licensing for pot distributors.

Dozens of retailers started selling recreational marijuana on July 1 but a unique state law could quickly lead to empty shelves. The law dictates only alcohol wholesalers can transport pot from growers to store fronts for the next 18 months.

So far, fewer than 10 alcohol wholesalers have applied for pot distribution licenses and as of last week none had met the qualifications, the Nevada Department of Taxation said.

Most recreational retailers were previously licensed under a 2-year-old medical marijuana program and many were distributing to themselves. The medical marijuana dispensaries started stockpiling supplies months ago in anticipation of high demand.

However, some of the 47 licensed retailers have reported twice as much business as they expected, said Nevada Tax Department spokeswoman Stephanie Klapstein.

“I have heard of some dispensaries running on fumes, if you will,” said Nevada Dispensary Association President Andrew Jolley.

Licensing for commercial sale of adult-use cannabis in California begins in January under Proposition 64, passed in November. Adult use of cannabis is already legal, but not yet for sale.

Production of cannabis for medical and adult use in California is ample, and regulators are at work creating rules for distribution and transportation.

The Nevada Tax Commission was scheduled to consider a new regulation Thursday in Carson City to license some pot retailers to serve as their own middleman if there aren’t enough alcohol distributors to do the job.

The proposed regulation would at least temporarily clear the way for sales as a legal battle over distribution continues.

A judge granted a temporary injunction, which the state is appealing to the Nevada Supreme Court, after the Independent Alcohol Distributors of Nevada persuaded him the state had arbitrarily concluded there was an insufficient number of liquor wholesalers to meet the demand.

Gov. Brian Sandoval has endorsed the proposal, which would specifically address what’s long been an elephant in the room for states with legalizrf recreational marijuana: the U.S. government still considers it illegal.

That was the biggest reason Deonne Contine, executive director of the state’s Department of Taxation, cited in March when she first expressed concern about “insufficient interest” among liquor wholesalers, especially in Nevada where many of their biggest customers are hotel-casinos also subject to numerous federal statutes.

Under the proposed regulation, the wholesaler must demonstrate it “has resolved to the best of its ability any potential conflicts with its federal liquor licensing and the distribution of a federally illegal product.”

Contine said in declaring the need for emergency action last week that marijuana retailers recorded more than 40,000 transactions in the first weekend.

“Without the ability to license marijuana distributors to continue the flow of product to the retail store, a high likelihood exists that consumers will revert to the black market,” Contine wrote. Unless the matter is resolved quickly, the distribution bottleneck will cost both the state and investors millions of dollars, thousands of jobs and “cause this nascent industry to grind to a halt.”

The new guidelines used to determine sufficiency to meet demand also would include:

- a sample of market demand for both medical and recreational pot over the past three months

- industry growth expectations based on other states

- the need make a minimum of three to five deliveries a day to some dispensaries

- an understanding of a complicated “seed to sale” tracking system.

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